Slides (ppt

The benefits & practice of openness
Sarah Jones
Digital Curation Centre, University of Glasgow
[email protected]
Twitter: @sjDCC
Boo(s)tcamp Open Science, KU Leuven, 24th October www.kuleuven.be/research/bootcamp
WHAT DOES IT MEAN
TO BE OPEN?
Image by biblioteekje CC-BY-NC-SA www.flickr.com/photos/biblioteekje/3992172265
What is open science?
“science carried out and communicated in a
manner which allows others to contribute,
collaborate and add to the research effort, with
all kinds of data, results and protocols made
freely available at different stages of the
research process.”
Research Information Network, Open Science case studies
www.rin.ac.uk/our-work/data-management-and-curation/
open-science-case-studies
Open methods
• Documenting and sharing workflows and methods
• Sharing code and tools to allow others to reproduce work
• Using web based tools to facilitate collaboration and
interaction from the outside world
• Open netbook science – “when there is a URL to a
laboratory notebook that is freely available and indexed
on common search engines.”
http://drexel-coas-elearning.blogspot.co.uk/2006/09/open-notebook-science.html
Open access to publications
• Free, immediate, online access to the results of research
• Make sure anyone can access your papers
– Gold route: paying APCs to ensure publishers makes copy open
– Green route: self-archiving Open Access copy in repository
• Find out what your publisher allows on SHERPA RoMEO
– www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo
Open data
“Open data and content can be freely used,
modified and shared by anyone for any purpose”
http://opendefinition.org
Tim Berners-Lee’s proposal for five star open data - http://5stardata.info





make your stuff available on the Web (whatever format) under an open licence
make it available as structured data (e.g. Excel instead of a scan of a table)
use non-proprietary formats (e.g. CSV instead of Excel)
use URIs to denote things, so that people can point at your stuff
link your data to other data to provide context
Openness at every stage
Design
impactstory.org
www.datacite.org
Release
www.myexperiment.org
Experiment
www.taverna.org.uk
www.labtrove.org
http://openwetware.org
www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo
Publication
Analysis
https://github.com
Open science image CC BY-SA 3.0 by Greg Emmerich www.flickr.com/photos/gemmerich/6365692655
WHY SHOULD YOU BE OPEN?
Image by wonderwebby CC-BY-NC-SA www.flickr.com/photos/wonderwebby/2723279491
It’s part of good research practice
Science as an open enterprise
“Much of the remarkable growth of
scientific understanding in recent
centuries is due to open practices; open
communication and deliberation sit at
the heart of scientific practice.”
Royal Society report calls for ‘intelligent
openness’ whereby data are accessible,
intelligible, assessable and usable.
https://royalsociety.org/policy/projects/science-public-enterprise/Report
Some benefits of openness
• You can access relevant literature – not behind pay walls
• Ensures research is transparent and reproducible
• Increased visibility, usage and impact of your work
• New collaborations and research partnerships
• Ensure long-term access to your outputs
• Help increase the efficiency of research
Saving wasted time
OA helps to reduce time spent finding/accessing material:
“If around 60 minutes were characteristic for researchers
(the average time spent trying to access the last research
article they had difficulty accessing), then in the current
environment the time spent dealing with research article
access difficulties might be costing around DKK 540
million (EUR 72 million) per year among specialist
researchers in Denmark alone.”
Access to research and technical information in Denmark,
Houghton, Swan & Brown (2011)
http://eprints.ecs.soton.ac.uk/22603
Cut down on academic fraud
www.nature.com/news/2011/111101/full/479015a.html
Validation of results
“It was a mistake in a spreadsheet that could
have been easily overlooked: a few rows left
out of an equation to average the values in a
column.
The spreadsheet was used to draw the
conclusion of an influential 2010 economics
paper: that public debt of more than 90% of
GDP slows down growth. This conclusion was
later cited by the International Monetary Fund
and the UK Treasury to justify programmes
of austerity that have arguably led to riots,
poverty and lost jobs.”
www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2013/apr/18/uncovered-error-george-osborne-austerity
Acceleration of the research process
“As more papers are deposited and more scientists
use the repository, the time between an article being
deposited and being cited has been shrinking
dramatically, year upon year. This is important for
research uptake and progress, because it means that
in this area of research, where articles are made
available at – or frequently before – publication, the
research cycle is accelerating.”
Open Access: Why should we have it? Alma Swan
www.keyperspectives.co.uk
More scientific breakthroughs
“It was unbelievable. Its not science
the way most of us have practiced in
our careers. But we all realised that
we would never get biomarkers unless
all of us parked our egos and
intellectual property noses outside
the door and agreed that all of our
data would be public immediately.”
Dr John Trojanowski, University of Pennsylvania
www.nytimes.com/2010/08/13/health/research/13alzheimer.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0
A citation advantage
A study that analysed the citation counts of 10,555 papers on gene
expression studies that created microarray data, showed:
“studies that made data available in a public repository
received 9% more citations than similar studies for
which the data was not made available”
Data reuse and the open data citation advantage,
Piwowar, H. & Vision, T. https://peerj.com/articles/175
Increased use and economic benefit
The case of NASA Landsat satellite imagery of the Earth’s surface:
Up to 2008
Since 2009
• Sold through the US Geological
Survey for US$600 per scene
• Sales of 19,000 scenes per year
• Freely available over the internet
• Google Earth now uses the images
• Transmission of 2,100,000
scenes per year.
• Annual revenue of $11.4 million
• Estimated to have created value for
the environmental management
industry of $935 million, with direct
benefit of more than $100 million
per year to the US economy
• Has stimulated the development of
applications from a large number of
companies worldwide
http://earthobservatory.nasa.gov/IOTD/view.php?id=83394&src=ve
But there are also opportunity costs
For his most recent paper:
By Emilio Bruna
http://brunalab.org/blog/2014/09/04/theopportunity-cost-of-my-openscience-was-35-hours-690
1.
Double checking the main dataset and
reformatting to submit to Dryad: 5 hours
2.
Creating complementary file and preparing
metadata: 3 hours
3.
Submission of these two files and the
metadata to Dryad: 45 minutes
4.
Preparing a map of the locations: 1 hour
5.
Submission of map to Figshare: 15 minutes
6.
Cleaning up and documenting the code,
uploading it to GitHub: 25 hours
7.
Cost of archiving in Dryad: US$90
8.
Page Charges: $600
So what needs to change?
Conclusions from Emilio Bruna:
• Develop a better system of incentives from the
community for archiving data and code
• Teach our students how to do this NOW - it’s much easier
if you develop good habits early
• Minimise the actual and opportunity costs
We need to stop telling people “You should” and get
better at telling people “Here’s how”
HOW TO PRACTICE OPEN SCIENCE
Image by Paul Downey CC-BY www.flickr.com/photos/psd/3925801816
Conducting science in the open: UsefulChem
http://usefulchem.wikispaces.com/EXP284
Collaboration & sharing: MyExperiment
www.myexperiment.org/workflows/16.html
Open access publication
Researcher
decides where
to publish
Publish in an
open access
journal
Pay Article Processing
Charge (APC) - if required
Immediate open
access (via
publisher)
GOLD OA ROUTE
GREEN OA ROUTE
Check SHERPA RoMEO
to see what OA and selfarchiving options are
available
www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo
Publish in a
subscriptionbased journal
Search for a repository
http://opendoar.org
IF OPTION EXISTS
e.g. a ‘hybrid’ journal
(a subscription-based journal
that has a paid open access
option)
Self-archive in a
repository, based
on publisher policy.
Pay Article
Processing Charge
(APC)
Immediate or delayed
open access, depending
on publisher’s policy.
Immediate open
access (via
publisher)
Sherpah RoMEO
Deposit in your local repository!
• Speak to the library and deposit in Lirias -
https://lirias.kuleuven.be
• Consider other relevant repositories for your field too
e.g. Arxiv - http://arxiv.org
• Check OpenDOAR for examples -
http://www.opendoar.org
OpenAIRE
Open Access Infrastructure for research in Europe
 aggregates data on OA publications
 mines & enriches it content by linking thing together
 provides services & APIs e.g.
to generate publication lists
www.openaire.eu
http://vimeo.com/108790101
How to make data open?
1. Choose your dataset(s)
• What can you may open? You may need to revisit this step if you
encounter problems later.
2. Apply an open license
https://okfn.org
• Determine what IP exists. Apply a suitable licence e.g. CC-BY
3. Make the data available
• Provide the data in a suitable format. Use repositories.
4. Make it discoverable
• Post on the web, register in catalogues…
Licensing research data
Outlines pros and cons of each approach
and gives practical advice on how to
implement your licence
CREATIVE COMMONS LIMITATIONS
Horizon 2020 Open
Access guidelines point to:
or
NC Non-Commercial
What counts as commercial?
SA Share Alike
Reduces interoperability
ND No Derivatives
Severely restricts use
www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/how-guides/license-research-data
Potential repositories
http://service.re3data.org/search
Zenodo
http://databib.org
•
OpenAIRE-CERN joint effort
•
Multidisciplinary repository
•
Multiple data types
– Publications
– Long tail of research data
•
Citable data (DOI)
•
Links funding, publications,
data & software
www.zenodo.org
Metadata standards
Use relevant standards for interoperability
www.dcc.ac.uk/resources/metadata-standards
Thanks – any questions?
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